Showing posts with label credit risk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label credit risk. Show all posts

Friday 1 February 2013

MAS regulator in Singapore plans ERM risk improvements

“The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) intends to improve standards for enterprise risk management (ERM) at all financial institutions (FIs) under its control, it says, as well as review the current risk-based capital regime. MAS has issued a notice of new guidelines, which are now out for public consultation and are expected to be implemented by 1 January 2014.

The risk proposals from MAS cover credit risk, market risk, internal controls, operational risks, liquidity and other risks arising from a company's membership in a group, and core insurance activities such as product development, pricing and underwriting are a particular focus. The Singaporean regulator said the rules are expected to apply to all registered insurers except captive insurers and marine mutuals.” <<READ MORE>>

Wednesday 23 February 2011

The Reasons for the Different Types of Risks Faced by Banks

One of the most misunderstood terms, especially when one relates it to banking, is that little word "risk".

Read what one of our Principal Associates has written in a new article published in Ezene Articles – CLICK HERE.

Monday 28 June 2010

Morgan Stanley decides to pay $102 million to stop investigation

Morgan Stanley has agreed to pay $102 million to end an investigation launched by Massachusetts prosecutors into the company’s unfair and deceptive lending practices.

According to the statement by Martha Coakley, the Massachusetts attorney general, Morgan Stanley which funded subprime loans throughout the US, improperly loaned billions of dollars to New Century which then sold loans to unqualified borrowers in the state. Morgan Stanley also packaged these risky loans and sold them to big investors like pension funds.

Coakley said that the settlement is ‘unprecedented’ and added that the amount would be divided between homeowners, taxpayers and state pension funds. Apart from this Morgan Stanley is also forced to overhaul parts of its lending practices by requiring more disclosure and demanding that the company stop funding "unfair subprime loans in Massachusetts," Coakley said.

Under the terms of the settlement Morgan Stanley will pay $58 million to affected Massachusetts borrowers and $23 million will go into an independent fund which will then cover the losses suffered by the Massachusetts Pension Reserves investment Trust and the Massachusetts Municipal Depository Trust funds. The state's taxpayers will receive $19.5 million, and $2 million will go to nonprofit groups that work with victims of subprime foreclosure in the state.

Massachusetts did not sue Morgan Stanley when it launched its probe. Under terms of the settlement, Morgan Stanley admitted to no wrongdoing.

"This has become an all-too-familiar pattern in which the deceptive practices of Wall Street devastated homeowners and investors, and ultimately contributed to the collapse of our economy," Coakley said in a news conference on Thursday.

She said that her investigation into unfair lending practices is continuing and that Morgan Stanley will provide information and materials needed by the office's investigators.

Thursday 17 June 2010

UK regulatory system set to change


The UK government has unveiled a shake-up of the countries system that will consolidate power within the Bank of England and eliminate the Financial Services Authority, long the main overseer of the nation's financial center, the City of London.

The new Conservative-led coalition government plans to splinter the FSA into three new agencies, including a bank-regulating subsidiary inside the Bank of England. The new regulatory approach was unveiled in a speech last Wednesday night in London by the UK's Treasury chief, George Osborne, who trumpeted "a new system of regulation that learns the lessons of the greatest banking crisis in our lifetime."

In the House of Parliament in London on Wednesday, George Osborne, trumpeted the 'new system of regulation.'

While more ambitious than expected, the structural changes are more functional than specific, leaving for a later date thorny questions over the appropriate structures of banks. The US is debating a range of rule changes that would impact the finance sector in much more extensive ways than Mr. Osborne's proposals. The European Union is pushing its own policies, including new oversight for hedge funds.

Forced to forge a coalition with the Liberal Democrats after a tight election, the Conservatives were expected to move more deliberately on their pledges of financial-system regulatory changes. But the Lib Dems are backing the government's attempt to make a clean break with a regulatory system tarred by the financial crisis, meaning that the changes are almost certain to come into effect.

At the heart of the proposed overhaul—which requires approval by Parliament and would be implemented by the end of 2012—is an empowered Bank of England. In addition to its current responsibility for monetary policy, the central bank will take charge of preventing systemic risks and of day-to-day supervision of the UK financial sector, including foreign companies that operate in the City of London, through a newly formed subsidiary, tentatively dubbed the Prudential Regulatory Authority.

The Bank of England's governor, Mervyn King, will become chairman of the expanded authority. He welcomed the changes as "the right direction of reform." He didn't address his past comments, specifically his argument that big banks should be broken up to separate risk-taking from utility banking, something the City has fiercely resisted.

The revamp has big implications for giant banks around the world, not just those headquartered in the UK. The FSA already has been getting tougher regulating overseas banks' London subsidiaries. The growing clout of Mr. King, who has talked openly of breaking up big banks, could subject the U.K. and foreign banks alike to more draconian oversight.

In the UK, the new agency within the Bank of England will inherit some of the powers of the FSA, which never fully recovered from its legacy of "light touch" regulation of London's financial community in the wake of the financial crisis. Further tarnishing the FSA in the eyes of many Tories, the previous Labour government established the agency in 1998 shortly after taking power, removing bank-regulatory oversight from the Bank of England.

While the FSA will cease to exist on paper, much of its current structure is likely to live on in the new prudential authority. Its supervisory staff is expected to remain largely intact, as is its newly muscular approach to policing banks, traders and insurers.

Even the agency's leader will be the same. The FSA's chief executive, Hector Sants, had announced plans to retire this summer, but Mr. Osborne persuaded him to take the helm of the new agency for three years. Mr. Sants will become a deputy governor of the Bank of England.

A restructuring will eliminate the UK's Financial Services Authority. Two of the FSA's other duties—consumer protection and law enforcement—will be assumed by new independent entities, including an agency focused on white-collar crime.

In addition to fulfilling a Conservative campaign pledge, the revamp of the regulatory system is intended to bring bank supervision under one roof at the central bank. The Tories blame a disjointed approach, in which officials from different agencies didn't coordinate with each other, for allowing the banking system to grow bloated with debt and for impeding the government's response when the crisis hit.

"Because central banks are the lenders of last resort ... they need to be familiar with every aspect of the institutions that they may have to support," Mr. Osborne said in Wednesday's speech, at a black-tie dinner attended by London's financial elite.

The new structure doesn't include a spot for the FSA's well-regarded chairman, Adair Turner, who is expected to remain at the FSA during a two-year transition. Lord Turner endorsed the shake-up Wednesday, saying it resolves the uncertainty surrounding the agency.

The planned overhaul is the product of weeks of negotiations and horse-trading that highlights the delicate nature of the coalition government. In order to win over Vince Cable, the Liberal Democratic business secretary who had opposed abolishing the FSA, Mr. Osborne let him pick at least two of the five members of a high-profile committee charged with making recommendations about the structure of the UK banking industry, according to a person familiar with the matter.

The proposed revamp is likely to prove controversial.

Some experts have said it risks distracting the Bank of England from its paramount role of setting monetary policy and controlling inflation at a particularly crucial time for the UK's struggling economy.

Mr. Sants himself was critical of the Conservatives' proposal to fold the FSA into the Bank of England. "There remains the possibility of tougher times to come for those we regulate," he said in a speech in November. "Now is not the time, therefore, to be diverting resource to looking at structural questions."

Bringing the FSA's supervisory infrastructure under the Bank of England's roof is likely to be especially tricky because of the two organizations' cultural differences.

For example, past and present officials at both organizations say the FSA tends to pay employees up to 50% more than the Bank of England. Senior FSA bank supervisors can pocket more than £300,000 ($444,000) annually, and the agency sometimes doles out lucrative bonuses. Mr. Sants received total compensation of £742,011 last year, more than double the £305,764 that Mr. King took home.

The FSA has argued that to police banks effectively, it needs to lure talent from them, which requires competitive pay packages. A lesser-paid civil-service culture pervades at the Bank of England.

Wednesday 26 May 2010

Banks reveal extent of 'dark pool' trading

Six big investment banks published trading volumes for their "dark pools" for the first time yesterday, showing them as a tiny fraction of the market and not the major hidden rivals to stock exchanges that some argue.

Citi, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, JP Morgan Cazenove, Morgan Stanley and UBS together executed €596m of equity trades from 15 countries on their automated crossing systems on Friday, according to Markit data.

That accounted for about 0.4 per cent of all types of cash equity trades in Europe and 1.6 per cent of all over-the-counter (OTC) trades reported on the Markit BOAT service that day, according to Thomson Reuters data.

Dark pools are electronic platforms that allow would-be buyers and sellers of large orders of shares to avoid revealing pre-trade information and signaling their intentions to the rest of the market.

Bankers argue that for the bulk of OTC trades they act purely as dealers, using their own money or share inventories to take one or another side, or they act in a non-automated way to match buyers and sellers for big blocks of stock.
 
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